bankers as buyers 2014 highlights presentation
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Bankers as Buyers 2014 Highlights PresentationTRANSCRIPT
The 11th annual report gives you a snapshot into the financial industry and explores trends for the coming year. An opportunity to download the free report is at the end of this presentation.
From the Editor
Dear friends,
2014 is shaping up to be a very interesting year for banks, credit unions and technology providers. According to our sources, we will finally see significant changes to branch strategy, real benefits gained by using big data, mobile 3.0 for better engagement and new ways to conduct business, a shift in spending toward outside providers and much more.
This year’s report includes perspectives from the major core providers (some of the largest fintech companies in the world).
The goal of Bankers As Buyers is to collect thoughts, ideas, concepts and research about financial technology and those forces driving change into one easy-to-read report.
Enjoy this highlight presentation and don’t forget to download the full free report at the end.
Best regards,Scott Mills, APR
Aite Group – Ron Shevlin
American Banker
American Bankers Association
Beyond the Arc – Steven Ramirez
CEB TowerGroup – Nicole Sturgill
Celent – Bob Meara, Zilvinas Baresis
Clientific – JP Nicols
Cornerstone Advisors – Sam Kilmer and Bob Roth
Computer Services Inc. (CSI) – Steve Powless
Credit Union National Association
Crone Consulting, LLC – Richard Crone and Heidi Liebenguth
CTS North America – Glen Fossella
CU Wallet – Paul Fiore
D+H – Scott Hansen
Equifax – Mike Griffith
FDIC
Federal Reserve
FIS – Nancy Langer
Fiserv – Steve Shaw
Gartner, Inc. – Alistar Newton
I7strategies – David Peterson
IDC Financial Insights – Jerry Silva
IPSOS
Jack Henry & Associates – Mark Forbis
Javelin Strategy & Research
Malauzai Software, Inc. – Robb Gaynor
Mercator Advisory Group – Pradeep Moudgal
Mortgage Bankers Association
Sawyers & Jacobs, LLC – Jimmy Sawyers
Contributors
Branch Network Transformation
Branch Network Transformation
• In the 3rd quarter of 2013, banks shuttered 390 branches, a trend that is expected to continue in 2014.
• The closures came as consumers continued to gravitate to mobile and the Internet for their basic banking needs – payments, deposits, balance queries and money transfers.
After endless years of discussions of the need to transform the branch to make it more productive in terms of revenue and less costly to operate, financial institutions are indeed moving in this direction.
“The virtual branch is becoming the
bank’s largest branch.”
David PetersonCSO of i7strategies
Branch Network Transformation
By leveraging mobile as part of their omni-channel strategy, banks can also save significantly on costs, according to Javelin Strategy and Research.
Branch Network Transformation
Javelin Strategy & Research finds that that 88.5 million Americans attempted to open an account online or with a smartphone or tablet device between mid-2012 and mid-2013.
Mobile 3.0
Mobile 3.0Mobile 3.0 brings more functionality so that consumers can use their mobile devices to:
• Check balances• Transfer funds• Make payments - including P2P
AND banks will rely on mobile for:
• Account openings• Customer relationship management• Marketing• Income generation
“Today 15 million people use their mobile devices to log in, check balances, look at history, transfer money (internally), look
at check images and deposit checks.”
Robb GaynorChief Product Officer & Co-founder Malauzai Software, Inc.
Mobile 3.0 By enrolling customers in mobile banking and mobile payments, banks position themselves to provide not only mobile alerts to customers about potential fraudulent transactions and to bank products, services and promotions, but also to promotions from advertising partners. With mortgages and many fee income opportunities limited, the additional revenue opportunity is important for many banks.
“The one who enrolls is the one who controls,”
Richard CroneCrone Consulting, LLC
Big Data Helps Drive Marketing, Fight Fraud
Big Data The more data that a financial institution has, the better the bank can anticipate a customer’s needs and the better it can detect a potentially fraudulent transaction.
Now banks also have access to unstructured data, including information culled from contact center emails and online chats, data from a financial institution’s own social media site and from third parties, including exterior social media sources.
Big Data With so many applications, banks are still trying to fully understand Big Data’s implementation and uses.
Another challenge is that different departments within a financial institution may know about different applications, leading to a potential silo issue.
If used correctly, though, Big Data does offer advantages. So, according to Celent, only 38% of banks are deploying or expanding Big Data implementations.
“Big Data is overhyped and ill-defined, it has a
very nascent infrastructure. There are
gobs of analytics applications.”
Bob Meara Senior Analyst Celent
Big Data Big Data enables a financial institution to be more proactive in detecting and preventing fraud.
The more data a bank has and the more timely it receives the information, the quicker it can determine if there is a fraudulent transaction or a pattern of fraud.
Big Data Celent estimates spending on Big Data in risk management will grow from $470 million in 2014 to $730 million in 2016 as tools mature and financial services and other firms deploy more enterprise-wide solutions.
Data Breach is considered a primary source of Card Fraud. Millions of consumers have been targeted. According to Javelin Strategy & Research, there has been a 340% increase in card breach and existing card fraud victims since 2010.
Payments Technology Stampede
Payments Technology Stampede
Financial institutions and non-banks alike are making huge investments in payments technologies, including mobile wallets, prepaid debit and other solutions.
Gartner, Inc. predicts that worldwide mobile payment transaction values will reach $235.4 billion in 2013, a 44% increase from 2012 values of $163.1 billion.
The number of mobile payment users worldwide will reach 245.2 million in 2013, up from 200.8 million in 2012.
80% of branch transactions are to deposit a single check – so it would be much less expensive for the bank to actually provide consumers with tablets or other wireless devices and teach them how to deposit a check via remote deposit capture than to have those customers continue to make those deposits at the branch
By leveraging mobile payments, banks can further leverage the use of other channels as well.
Javelin further estimates that banks can increase household adoption of online banking by 22% by targeting 29 million Americans who are just one step away from paying their bills at the bank.
Payments Technology Stampede
Banks Focus on Underbanked and Wealthy
Banks Focus on Underbanked and Wealthy Banks continue to seek to expand their customer base by attracting
the wealthy and the underbanked. According to the FDIC, 8% of all households are unbanked.
“The thing that both groups have in common is stress around money. Those with low-income have high stress about late payments, overdraft fees, and how to accumulate money. The wealthy have stress about how to maintain their wealth and pass it down to their heirs.”
JP NicolsCEO of Clientific
Compliance Strategies
Bankers have lamented the high cost of compliance and regulation for years, and even more so since the writing of the Dodd-Frank rules.
92% of the country’s chartered banks have less than $1 billion in assets. Technology, working in collaboration with a third party through co-sourcing and outsourcing of compliance functions are all helping banks meet the increasing cost of compliance.
Compliance Strategies
With rules changes happening faster than ever before, banks will need to increasingly rely on automation to help them meet compliance mandates.
Nicole SturgillResearch Director CEB Tower
Core Perspectives
Core Perspectives
CSI – Steve Powless
Building the Future on the Foundation of the PastThree Key Trends Continuing in 2014
• Identifying the bottom line–Calculating and Raising Profitability
• When it comes to profitability, the good news is that it’s up, specifically on the lending side of the house. In general, profits and asset quality are improving, while loan delinquencies and loan loss provisions are shrinking.
• The key to maximizing profits this year will be the adoption of more sophisticated profitability and data analysis tools.
• Playing by the Rules–The Impact of Compliance• While loan performance is improving and a cause for
celebration, the top concern keeping bankers awake at night is the continuing burden of the regulatory environment, especially for smaller institutions.
• Locking the Virtual Doors–Cybersecurity Goes Mainstream• Cybersecurity roared into the mainstream in December
when retail giant Target revealed that more than 40 million card accounts were stolen in a massive data breach. But Target was not alone: every month brought news of another breach–sometimes from retailers, sometimes from financial institutions.
Core Perspectives
D+H (Harland) – Scott Hansen
A Changing Financial Landscape: Exploring the Top Trends of 2014
The financial industry has undergone some radical changes in the past few years, emerging from an era of economic downturn and housing crisis into a highly regulated, digital world where agility and connectivity are key. Consumer behavior is changing, security threats loom and operational efficiency is critical to counterbalancing the impact of shrinking profit margins. Here are the key trends:
1. Vendor Consolidation: Less is More
2. Self-Service Expansion: The Rise of Do-It-Yourself Banking
3. Emerging Payment Technologies: Moving to Mainstream
4. Increased Adoption of Outsourced Solutions: “You Run My Technology, I’ll Run My Institution”
5. Regulatory Compliance and Risk Management Support: Calling in Reinforcements
6. The Times, They Are A-Changing
Core Perspectives
FIS – Nancy Langer Modernizing the Consumer ExperienceHow financial institutions will improve IT in 2014
MobileOur mobile devices are with us all the time, and mobile commerce grew 63% over 2012. A few financial institutions already have begun to offer comprehensive mobile financial management – banking, real-time and international transfers, payments and more – across smartphone and tablet platforms. Keeping pace with customers and continuing to expand those services will remain a goal of 2014.
Real-time PaymentsAlong the same line as mobile growth, studies have shown real-time payments are the future of money movement. A 2013 study by global market research provider Ipsos Vantis, on behalf of FIS, found that consumers who transfer money person-to-person ‒ especially those sending money overseas ‒ want to make those transactions immediate.
Active AnalyticsAs consumers have become more knowledgeable about how and why companies use information to follow and market to them, they also have become more sophisticated about what they expect in return. This move to a customer interaction business model is a major shift for financial institutions. OmnichannelOmnichannel has become an industry buzzword, but it’s for good reason. To best serve customers, financial institutions must find a way to make a customer’s experience the same whether it takes place in a branch, on a computer, via mobile device or elsewhere.
Cloud technologyExpanding their service footprints in so many technological areas also requires additional security measures. Cloud technology allows financial institutions to better protect trusted data across the multitude of devices they are allowing customers to use.
Read as: 52 percent of overseas money transfer users want the ability to conduct real-time overseas money transfers using a mobile device (a mobile phone or tablet)Source: FIS, March 2013, n = 1,508
Read as: 80 percent of overseas money transfer users believe it’s important for their recipients to be to be able to use the money they send to them immediatelySource: FIS, March 2013, n = 1,508
Core Perspectives
Fiserv – Steve ShawDelivering Tailored Experiences Across Digital Channels Demands a Holistic Approach
Over the past few years many financial institutions have had an almost myopic focus on mobile. While this focus on mobile was merited, other digital banking and payment services were often pushed to the back burner, receiving relatively little attention.
In the digital banking age, it’s increasingly clear that a more holistic approach is necessary. Consumers prefer a seamless consistent experience across all channels. Instead of viewing online, mobile, tablet, bill pay and emerging payment capabilities as individual services, more financial institutions will be making enterprise-wide investments in digital product suites in 2014.
• A Holistic Digital Channels Approach • Distinct Devices• Behavioral Difference Across Channels: How and Why• Creating Tailored Digital Banking Experiences• Consistency in Design, Detail and Data
Core Perspectives
Jack Henry & Associates – Mark ForbisFive Areas of Focus for Banks in 2014
Looking at the road ahead, there are five specific interconnected areas on which banks will focus their resources in 2014: mobile, user experience, efficiency gains, revenue growth and fraud and risk avoidance. Through these five strategic focuses, banks are setting their sights on a year that will improve customer retention and raise profitability.
• The Mad World of Mobile BankingBankers now understand that mobile is the new Internet banking. Consumers have shown that if they can perform a task via mobile banking, they will. In fact, within two years we could see mobile banking with higher usage rates than Internet banking.
• User Experience in the SpotlightToday, consumers want to touch, scroll, swipe and customize to their heart’s content. In the beginning, retailers took the brunt of the demand for new and flashy interactions. Now consumers are seeking a similar level of visual appeal and usability from their banking technology.
• Efficiency Rules the DayOne of the most important debates bank decision-makers will have in 2014 is how to effectively leverage burgeoning self-service channels for efficiency gains.
• Revenue GenerationAll the efficiency plays in the world mean nothing without a concerted effort to find new sources of revenue. For community and mid-tier institutions in 2014, those efforts will be focused in on new fees for service and expanding small and medium sized business outreach.
• Fraud and Risk AboundFraud attacks dominated headlines in 2013 – don’t expect it to change in 2014. This new fraud reality is here to stay. And so too is a greater scrutiny by regulators on risk management.
Top Ten Trends Impacting Bank
Technology for 2014
By Jimmy Sawyers
Top 10 Trends Prediction #1 - Debit Makes a Comeback
Prediction #2 - Bankers Demand Relief from Third-Party Security Breaches, Stricter Oversight of Retailers, and Better Risk Mitigation Methods
Prediction #3 - Mobile Banking Gets More Mobile
Prediction #4 - Apple Falters and Microsoft Surges While New Devices Emerge
Prediction #5 - The Mobile Workforce Gets the Tools They Need to Succeed
Prediction #6 - Bill Pay Enjoys a Resurgence Due to the Mobile Channel
Prediction #7 - Bankers Get Helpful Via the Online Customer Concierge
Prediction #8 - Risk Management Requires a More Sophisticated Approach
Prediction #9 - Bankers Co-Source and Adapt to New Compliance Requirements
Prediction #10 - Next-Generation ATMs Become Viable Alternatives to Traditional Branches